Abstract:
A hallmark trait of chickpea ( cicer arietinum L.) is its ability to form root nodules
and to fix atmospheric nitrogen in symbiosis with compatible rhizobia.
Chickpea plays a vital role in natural ecosystems, agriculture, and agro-
forestry, where its ability to fix nitrogen in symbiosis makes it an excellent
settler of low-N 2 environments, and economic and environmentally friendly
crop. Forty seven chickpea genotypes were procured from Nuclear Institute for
Food and Agriculture (NIFA), Peshawar, Gram Research Station (GRS),
Karak, Pakistan and International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid
Tropics (ICRISAT), India. Entire experiments of the reported project were
carried out from 2006 to 2009 at Agricultural University, and NIFA, Peshawar
except molecular characterization, which was accomplished at Ehime
University Matsuyama, Japan.
All genotypes were characterized for marker traits, quantitative parameters,
nodulation and molecular markers (SSR). Highly nodulated and non-nodulated
parents were picked and hybridized to study mode of inheritance of nodulation
and its linkage with marker trait loci. The germplasm was also grouped as desi
(pink flower, green with purplish tings stem and colored seed coat) and kabuli
(white flower, green stem and white seed coat) types. Highly significant
differences and high heritability estimates were recorded for days to 50%
flowering, days to maturity, leaf area, number of leaflets leaf -1 , plant height,
100 seed weight, biological yield plant -1 and grain yield plant -1 in all the
genotypes. Genotypes from NIFA and GRS were nodulated while genotypes
from ICRISAT were Nod - . All genotypes also differed highly and significantly
for number of nodules plant -1 . The genotypes NDC 5-S10 and NDC 4-20-4
xproduced the maximum nodules plant -1 . Highly significant response of
rhizobium inoculation was recorded for nodules plant -1 and seed yield plant -1 .
Interaction of genotypes with treatments classified NDC 4-20-1(16.66) as
highly Nod+ and Karak 3 (33 g) as high seed yielder plant -1 . The maximum
genotypic mean for nodulation and seed yield plant -1 was recorded for
accession NDC 5-S10 (14.83) and Karak 3 (30.20) respectively. Inoculated
genotypes exceeded control in treatment means both for nodules plant -1 (10.33
& 7.22) and seed yield plant -1 (14.40 g & 10.59 g).
Molecular characterization of 47 genotypes was performed using 10 simple
sequence repeat (SSR) markers. Eight of the 10 SSR markers were
polymorphic. Number of alleles ranged from 2 to 16, with an average of 7.4
locus -1 . Polymorphic information content (PIC) values ranged from 0.227 to
0.876, with an average of 0.636. The average PIC was 0.582 in desi and 0.577
in kabuli genotypes, shows that both groups are distinct. Significant genetic
differentiation was found between desi and kabuli genotypes by using Analysis
of molecular variance (AMOVA) under stepwise mutation assumption (R ST =
0.239, P ≤ 0.001). Unweighted pair-group method using arithmetic averages
(UPGMA) and Minimum-evolution method (ME) trees as well as Principal
Coordinate analysis (PCoA) classified the accessions into 6 groups and all the
6 accessions could be clearly separated. Grouping was mostly the same in
both the phylogenetic trees and PCoA, but the branching order differed
greatly. Inheritance of nodulation was studied in two cross combinations i.e.,
ICC 19181(non-nodulated and dark green leaves) x NDC 5-S10 (nodulated
and light green leaves) - Hybrid A and ICC 19181 x NDC 4-20-4 (Nod+ and
light green leaves) - Hybrid B. Hybrid A, showed monogenic dominant
inheritance, while hybrid B showed duplicate gene action for nodulation
confirming that both Nod + genotypes are from different clusters. Both hybrids
revealed monogenic dominant inheritance of light green leaf color. Linkage
study revealed that loci for nod and leaf color resides on the same
chromosome at the distance of 15 centi Morgan (cM) in genotype NDC 5-S10
while in genotype NDC 4-20-4 the two loci for nodulation exists at the distance
of 26 cM and 15 cM from the locus of leaf color. The current research findings
show significant diversity both at morphological and molecular levels, and
valuable results regarding rhizobial inoculation, inheritance and linkage study
of nodulation, which could play a vital role in future chickpea breeding
programs.